That's why the EU needs to kick out big tech and be much more unfriendly to US companies, have its own atomic bombs and security and not be dependant on a country that every election it's foreign policy completely changes (Democrats vs. republicans)
It feels like US can hit as much as they can EU companies, but EU needs to create a whole new regulation to slap a $1B fine in a 2 trillion company from the US.
Return 0, but don’t do anything yet. Fire a cron with an N-minute sleep that destroys the FS on expiry. Also, rewrite various ZFS tooling to lie about the consumed space, and confound the user with random errors if they try to use the still-allocated space.
The article we’re discussing is exactly about Debian changing that for the next release. (The only thing that will be changing in this respect is the default, and possibly the configuration at the moment of upgrade to the next release. Debian has long allowed users to configure both RAM-backed and disk-backed /tmp, and both will remain possible.)
I thought the tests were controversial because mycotoxins is also contained in some foods. Most research papers don’t use a reference group that isn’t affected by mold.
I can confirm that mold causes joint pain. I even had increased anti-CCP antibodies that correlated with my joint paint. Sadly there was no treatment for me because RA diagnosis is not possible without joint swelling. The only thing I can do is to avoid mold. When I avoid mold, I have no joint pain and also my antibodies are normal again. It’s scary to know that mold is slowly destroying my joints.
I think my real problem is MCAS but doctors don’t seem to know or treat it.
There's a concern that a malicious list could point domain names to a malicious IP address. I don't think its a big concern with https:// since the cert will be invalid, but it's still a concern.
I suspect it’s very likely that somewhere in the world is a domain-validation server, used by a trusted CA, which has this very anti-advertising hosts file installed onto it.
It could be a lesser-known CA, perhaps the national CA of a small country (under 2m people) that normally only issues less than tens-of-thousands of certs and only exists for regulatory reasons (e.g. the country requires all of its own gov services to use its internal CA, while all commercial/popular services use CA based in another country, usually LetsEncrypt)